Read on to find out how you can use this tool in your next project, publication, or DIY escapade.

Kuler Shaker

In order to get the most out of Kuler, you’ll want to sign in with your Adobe ID. You might be surprised to learn you have an Adobe ID (I was); but if you’ve downloaded a recent trial or pre-release version of Photoshop or one of the other Creative Suite components then you will already have an account you can use. Once you’re logged in, you can save, contribute and add your thoughts on the various color schemes found therein.

Kuler uses themes comprising of five colors Depending on the type of color scheme you would like, different rules govern which colors appear in each theme. These rules have not been created by Adobe, and instead fallback on a set of design principles that specifically relate to color. They are:

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Analogous: Create themes from similar colors which are adjacent on the color wheel.

Monochromatic: Use one color as a base with additional colors suggested based on variation in the intensity and lightness of the base hue.

Creating a theme from a color is a fairly self explanatory affair, and also offers somewhat of a visual learning experience when it comes to the rules of color. First choose a base color and then a rule. You can drag individual points around on the color wheel and watch how each hue relates to the other. To save the theme, enter a title and a few tags then choose whether you’d like to share it publicly or keep it private. You can then make further changes without losing your original. Saved themes can be retrieved under the Mykuler menu entry.

Color Me Surprised

In addition to creating your own color schemes with a helping hand from the various rules, you can also browse a huge range of color schemes contributed by the rest of the Kuler community. Under the Themes menu entry it is possible to sort through the best, most popular and newest submissions. You can add to your favorites with a click, or download the swatch file in a click. Another option next to each theme allows you to open and modify the theme to your liking. There’s a search option there for searching by tag, though this relies on the community’s ability to tag their creations.

It’s possible to rate, comment and favorite themes you come across, as well as subscribing to each category’s individual RSS feeds if you’re so inclined. The Community and Pulse sections are also worth exploring, with the former offering a spotlight on community members and their contributions.

Pulse is a little more advanced, providing a global overview of color usage on the Kuler service, though it could do with an update.

One thing worth mentioning here is that Kuler has started to feel a little neglected by Adobe. This is not to say that there aren’t active community members (there are) or new submissions (plenty every day), but that the free service could do with an update. While Adobe is bound to integrate Kuler into the newly announced Creative Cloud replacement for Creative Suite, the free tool is currently one big advert for the company’s services and I personally believe keeping the free version of Kuler running smoothly is not only good marketing but a great way for the company to offer something to the rest of us for free.

Conclusion

It’s clear that Kuler is a killer tool that will help you make sense of color schemes and learn more about how complementary, contrasting and other similar hues relate to each other on the color wheel. If you’re a bit hopeless when it comes to these decisions then Adobe Kuler will make life much easier. Despite being a bit old and rusty (and a reliance on Flash) the service is just as useful as it was from day one. I just hope that Adobe doesn’t make it a premium product in the future, update or not.

Have you used Kuler? What for? Are there any other great color pickers you use? Let us know what you think in the comments, below.

Thanks for a great review. I'd just like to read more about the "custom" color schemes; they no longer follow any "scientific" rules about good color matching, so, are they useful? I mean, I could might as well just pick my five favourite colors, no? So I'd like to know why anyone would use Custom.

I like Kuler, but searching by tags is ridiculous. Why can't we search by color? This is a major omission Adobe has never addressed. In so many design projects, a designer already has 1 or 2 company colors that must be used. It would be so useful to type in their PMS or RGB values, and have Kuler show results of schemes people have created with those colors, or similar colors. Instead we're left mindlessly browsing schemes in random order, or searching for meaningless words like "habitat."

I know right - it's so old by now, yet we've still not had a dedicated mention. I wish Adobe would've kept it a little more up to date over the years, but hopefully they'll do a nice HTML5 version or similar soon. I'll be crossing my fingers, anyway!